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{{Short description|Pump designed to create and maintain high vacuum}} {{About|the vacuum pump|the propellant compressor|Turbopump}} [[Image:Cut through turbomolecular pump.jpg|thumb|Interior view of a turbomolecular pump]] A '''turbomolecular pump''' is a type of [[vacuum pump]], superficially similar to a [[turbopump]], used to obtain and maintain high [[vacuum]].<ref name="O'Hanlon2005">{{cite book|author=John F. O'Hanlon|title=A User's Guide to Vacuum Technology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9aNaUW-q4ygC&pg=PA387|date=4 March 2005|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-0-471-46715-1|pages=385β}}</ref><ref name="Kati1980">{{cite book|author=Marton, Kati|title=Vacuum Physics and Technology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tfLWfAx1ZWQC&pg=PA258|date=18 January 1980|publisher=Academic Press|isbn=978-0-08-085995-8|pages=247β}}</ref> These pumps work on the principle that gas molecules can be given [[momentum]] in a desired direction by repeated collision with a moving solid surface. In a turbomolecular pump, a rapidly spinning [[Mechanical fan|fan]] rotor 'hits' gas molecules from the inlet of the pump towards the exhaust in order to create or maintain a vacuum. ==Operating principles== Most turbomolecular pumps employ multiple stages, each consisting of a quickly rotating [[Rotor (turbine)|rotor blade]] and stationary [[stator|stator blade]] pair. The system is an [[axial compressor]] that puts energy into the gas, rather than a [[turbine]], which takes energy out of a moving fluid to create rotary power, thus "turbomolecular pump" is a misnomer. Gas captured by the upper stages is pushed into the lower stages and successively compressed to the level of the fore-vacuum (backing pump) pressure. As the [[gas]] molecules enter through the inlet, the rotor, which has a number of angled blades, hits the molecules. Thus the mechanical energy of the blades is transferred to the gas molecules. With this newly acquired momentum, the gas molecules enter into the gas transfer holes in the stator. This leads them to the next stage where they again collide with the rotor surface, and this process is continued, finally leading them outwards through the exhaust. Because of the relative motion of rotor and stator, molecules preferentially hit the lower side of the blades. Because the blade surface looks down, most of the scattered molecules will leave it downwards. The surface is rough, so no reflection will occur. A blade needs to be thick and stable enough for high pressure operation and as thin as possible and slightly bent for maximum compression. For high compression ratios the throat between adjacent rotor blades (as shown in the image) is pointing as much as possible in the forward direction. For high flow rates the blades are at 45Β° and reach close to the axis. [[Image:Turbo pump schematic-2011-05-02-en.svg|thumb|right|250 px|Schematic of a turbomolecular pump.]] Because the compression of each stage is β10, each stage closer to the outlet is considerably smaller than the preceding inlet stages. This has two consequences. The geometric progression tells us that infinite stages could ideally fit into a finite axial length. The finite length in this case is the full height of the housing as the [[Bearing (mechanical)|bearings]], the motor, and controller and some of the coolers can be installed inside on the axis. Radially, to grasp as much of the thin gas at the entrance, the inlet-side rotors would ideally have a larger [[radius]], and correspondingly higher centrifugal force; ideal blades would get thinner towards their tips. However, because the average speed of a blade affects pumping so much this is done by increasing the root [[diameter]] rather than the tip diameter where practical. Turbomolecular pumps must operate at very high speeds, and the heat buildup due to friction imposes design limitations. Some turbomolecular pumps use [[magnetic bearing]]s to reduce [[friction]] and oil contamination. Because the magnetic bearings and the temperature cycles allow for only a limited clearance between rotor and stator, the blades at the high pressure stages are somewhat degenerated into a single helical foil each. Laminar flow cannot be used for pumping, because laminar turbines stall when not used at the designed flow. The pump can be cooled down to improve the compression, but should not be so cold as to condense ice on the blades. When a turbopump is stopped, the oil from the backing vacuum may backstream through the turbopump and contaminate the chamber. One way to prevent this is to introduce a laminar flow of [[nitrogen]] through the pump. The transition from vacuum to nitrogen and from a running to a still turbopump has to be synchronized precisely to avoid mechanical stress to the pump and overpressure at the exhaust. A thin membrane and a valve at the exhaust should be added to protect the turbopump from excessive back pressure (e.g. after a power failure or leaks in the backing vacuum). The rotor is stabilized in all of its six [[degrees of freedom (mechanics)|degrees of freedom]]. One degree is governed by the electric motor. Minimally, this degree must be stabilized electronically (or by a [[diamagnetic]] material, which is too unstable to be used in a precision pump bearing). Another way (ignoring losses in [[magnetic cores]] at high frequencies) is to construct this bearing as an axis with a sphere at each end. These spheres are inside hollow static spheres. On the surface of each sphere is a checkerboard pattern of inwards and outwards going magnetic field lines. As the checkerboard [[pattern]] of the static spheres is rotated, the rotor rotates. In this construction no axis is made stable on the cost of making another axis unstable, but all axes are neutral and the electronic regulation is less stressed and will be more dynamically stable. Hall effect sensors can be used to sense the rotational position and the other degrees of freedom can be measured capacitively. ==Maximum pressure== [[Image:Edwards turbopump.jpg|thumb|left|A turbomolecular pump with attached [[vacuum ionization gauge]] for [[pressure measurement]].]] At atmospheric pressure, the [[mean free path]] of air is about 70 nm. A turbomolecular pump can work only if those molecules hit by the moving blades reach the stationary blades before colliding with other molecules on their way. To achieve that, the gap between moving blades and stationary blades must be close to or less than the mean free path. From a practical construction standpoint, a feasible gap between the blade sets is on the order of 1 mm, so a turbopump will stall (no net pumping) if exhausted directly to the atmosphere. Since the mean free path is inversely proportional to pressure, a turbopump will pump when the exhaust pressure is less than about {{convert|10|Pa|mbar|abbr=on}} where the mean free path is about 0.7 mm. Most turbopumps have a [[Holweck pump]] (or molecular drag pump) as their last stage to increase the maximum backing pressure (exhaust pressure) to about 1β10 mbar. Theoretically, a centrifugal pump, a side channel pump, or a [[vacuum pump|regenerative pump]] could be used to back to atmospheric pressure directly, but currently there is no commercially available turbopump that exhausts directly to atmosphere. In most cases, the exhaust is connected to a mechanical backing pump (usually called [[roughing pump]]) that produces a pressure low enough for the turbomolecular pump to work efficiently. Typically, this backing pressure is below 0.1 mbar and commonly about 0.01 mbar. The backing pressure is rarely below 10<sup>β3</sup> mbar (mean free path β 70 mm) because the flow resistance of the vacuum pipe between the turbopump and the roughing pump becomes significant. The turbomolecular pump can be a very versatile pump. It can generate many degrees of vacuum from intermediate vacuum (β10<sup>β2</sup> Pa) up to [[ultra high vacuum|ultra-high vacuum]] levels (β10<sup>β8</sup> Pa). Multiple turbomolecular pumps in a lab or manufacturing-plant can be connected by tubes to a small backing pump. Automatic valves and [[diffusion pump]] like injection into a large buffer-tube in front of the backing pump prevents any overpressure from one pump to stall another pump. ==Practical considerations== Laws of [[fluid dynamics]] do not provide good approximations for the behavior of individual, highly separated, non-interacting gas molecules, like those found in [[vacuum|high vacuum]] environments. The maximum compression varies linearly with circumferential rotor speed. In order to obtain extremely low pressures down to 1 [[pascal (unit)|micropascal]], rotation rates of 20,000 to 90,000 revolutions per minute are often necessary. Unfortunately, the compression ratio varies exponentially with the square root of the molecular weight of the gas. Thus, heavy molecules are pumped much more efficiently than light [[molecule]]s. Most gases are heavy enough to be well pumped but it is difficult to pump [[hydrogen]] and [[helium]] efficiently. An additional drawback stems from the high rotor speed of this type of pump: very [[Magnetic bearing|high grade]] [[bearing (mechanical)|bearing]]s are required, which increase the cost. [[File:Turbomolecular pump 2.jpg|thumb|right|250 px|The turbomolecular pump from ICP-MS instrument Varia.]] Because turbomolecular pumps only work in molecular flow conditions, a pure turbomolecular pump will require a very large backing pump to work effectively. Thus, many modern pumps have a molecular drag stage such as a [[Holweck pump|Holweck or Gaede]] mechanism near the exhaust to reduce the size of backing pump required. Much of recent turbo pump development has been focused on improvement of the effectiveness of the drag stages. As gas is removed from a pumped space, the lighter gases hydrogen and helium become a larger proportion of the remaining gas load. In recent years it has been demonstrated that the precise design of the surface geometry of the drag stages can have a marked effect on pumping of these light gases, improving compression ratios by up to two orders of magnitude for given pumping volume.{{Citation needed|date=November 2022}} As a result, it is possible to use much smaller backing pumps than would be required by pure turbomolecular pumps and/or design more compact turbomolecular pumps. ==History== {{See also|Molecular drag pump}} The turbomolecular pump was invented in 1958 by W. Becker<!-- Wiley's Handbook of Vacuum Technology, p.420 says 1956, but ~shrug ~~~~ -->, based on the older molecular drag pumps developed by [[Wolfgang Gaede]] in 1913, [[Fernand Holweck]] in 1923 and [[Manne Siegbahn]] in 1944.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | editor=Robert M. BesanΓ§on | encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of Physics | edition=3rd | year=1990 | publisher=Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York | isbn = 0-442-00522-9 | pages = 1278β1284 | article=Vacuum Techniques}}</ref> ==See also== *[[Roots blower]] ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{commons category|Turbomolecular pumps}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20070603173443/http://www.cbem.imperial.ac.uk/EM_Faculty/Equipment/Turbo_Molecular_Pump.htm Some practical guidelines] {{DEFAULTSORT:Turbomolecular Pump}} [[Category:Vacuum pumps]]
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